| ◼ Standing outside the gates of the Israeli embassy in Washington, Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old U.S. airman, set himself on fire while dressed in his uniform and livestreamed it. “I will no longer be complicit in genocide,” Bushnell declared. “I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest. But compared to what people have been experiencing in Palestine at the hands of their colonizers, it’s not extreme at all.” Bushnell then doused himself in a flammable liquid and self-immolated. “Free Palestine!” were his last words. He died hours later. Bushnell’s actions were deranged and tragic—as some of the reactions have also been. Cornel West praised Bushnell’s courage, and activist Aya Hijazi lauded Bushnell as “a hero and a martyr.” Jill Stein heralded Bushnell’s “extraordinary sacrifice.” But his actions weren’t heroic. They were an embrace of nihilism and a demonstration of mental illness’s ravages. May Aaron Bushnell find the peace he could not in life.
◼ A picture is worth a thousand words. The remarkable images generated by Google’s Gemini, a new AI tool—it notoriously generated multiracial casts when users asked to see Nazis—were not only bizarrely entertaining but unforgettably illustrated how far to the left Google’s corporate ideology skews. AI sorts, sifts, and judges the material it surveys in ways that will necessarily reflect the views of those who program it, an inevitably opaque process. Many users will be content to rely upon, say, an AI chatbot as a sole source of information. A better approach would be to distrust—and verify.
◼ As he was from 2007 to 2014, Radek Sikorski is the foreign minister of Poland. Earlier in his career, he was a foreign correspondent for National Review. At the United Nations last Friday, February 23, he spent an extraordinary four minutes refuting the Russian ambassador there. A video of Sikorski’s calm, factual response went around the world. One by one, he shredded the Russian’s charges. A brief sample: “He blamed the war on ‘U.S. neocolonialism.’ In fact, Russia tried to exterminate Ukraine in the 19th century, again under the Bolsheviks, and this is the third attempt.” “He even said that Poland attacked Russia during World War II. What is he talking about? It’s the Soviet Union that attacked Poland, together with Nazi Germany, on the 17th of September 1939. They even held a joint victory parade on the 22nd of September.” On it went, coolly and satisfyingly. Truth against lies is a powerful thing.
◼ Even after killing him, the Kremlin seems afraid of Alexei Navalny. The deceased’s mother, Lyudmila Navalnaya, had to fight for a public funeral for him. The authorities wanted him buried in secret. They threatened to “do something” to Navalny’s body, his mother told the press. Navalny’s brother, Oleg, is in exile, on the Kremlin’s “wanted list.” Navalny’s widow, Yulia, is also in exile (with their two children). The Kremlin has started an intense online campaign against her. On state television, Vladimir Solovyov, a leading propagandist, warned proudly that she would be killed if she returned to Russia. He further said that the murder of Alexei Navalny was perfectly justified. But he also planted a doubt as to who killed him. “The West is the only beneficiary of his death! Here, he wasn’t interesting to anyone, unwanted and forgotten—totally gone. They had to revive interest, shake things up, and disrupt the fantastic effect from the interview of our country’s leader with Tucker Carlson.” So it goes in Putin’s Russia.
◼ Gunmen killed at least 15 worshipers at a Catholic church on Sunday, February 25, in Essakane, a village in northeast Burkina Faso. Neither church nor government officials have identified the perpetrators, who are, however, widely assumed to be Islamist militants, given the barrage of such attacks throughout the Sahel in the past decade. Insurgent militias now control 40 percent of the territory of Burkina Faso, according to the International Rescue Committee. Organized violence against Christians—and Muslims whom the jihadists deem insufficiently orthodox—exacerbates the political instability that has tormented this small West African nation, among the world’s poorest, since its independence from French colonial rule in 1960. The government that took power after the latest coup, in September 2022, ordered the expulsion of French troops, even though the military and local police are overmatched in their fight against terrorist groups affiliated with or descended from ISIS and al-Qaeda. Troops from the Africa Corps, a spinoff of the Wagner Group, deployed to Burkina Faso in January. They deepen Russian footprints in the region as its security ties to Europe fade. |